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What landmark shows have you missed?

The only TV series-es that I ever really watched regularly are Trek, TZ and L&O. (Corner Gas is my favorite show of all time, and I watch the DVDs religiously, but apparently that doesn't count since nobody here knows what it is. :sigh: ) Draw your own conclusions. :p
 
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What's the deal with Seinfeld?

Was that intentional? :) Anyway sounds like it's just not your type of humor if you don't like Curb at all either.


Weird you'd put it like that as I just finished Arrested Development today (in conclusion: it was pretty funny) and The Shield was one of a half-dozen programs I was considering checking into next.

I mean, it has Walton Goggins. That has to count for something.

If you like Walton Goggins there's a lot to like in The Shield. I mean, he's a scuzzy slimeball but what a scuzzy slimeball!
 
Laser, you're ahead of me. TNG is the only show -- landmark or other -- I've watched regularly, ever (well, unless we want to go all the way back to The Mickey Mouse Club :lol:).

I watched DS9, Enterprise, Homicide and Columbo semi-regularly. That's probably it.

I want to watch The Wire eventually. I saw the first few episodes, and they were terrific, but I was still working in corrections then, and watching them kind of felt like working overtime.
 
You know this is a good thread precisely because there are times I feel like I should hunker down and watch one of the 'big' name TV titles, something I've actually done a lot of this year. It's nice to get people's senses on whether say The X Files is worth it (hey, something something episode written by Vince Gilligan with an appearance by Bryan Cranston something something David Chase considered writing on this show etc.).

The only one on my original list I feel I must get round to seeing one day is Twin Peaks, which I've heard mixed things about. Mind you, that seems par for course for poor old Lynch :)
Twin Peaks is all over the place. Frankly most of the soap opera stuff bored me to tears, there's whole chunks of the better-regarded first season I don't care for. What works in the show is when it gets really weird and Lynchian (dream sequences especially) and some but not all of the characters (Agent Cooper especially). And while the first season had a lot of really tiresome soap opera nonsense sandwiched between some wonderful slabs of weirdness, season two got really dire, really fast... and yet also has some of the best things to happen in the series run, including a season finale that has to be one of the creepiest mindfuckiest things to ever air on American network television.

It's arguably worth watching in its entirety at least once if you're a fan of David Lynch, but other than that I can't recommend it that highly.

What's the deal with Seinfeld? I like the idea of a comedy show about nothing, but the few episodes of the show I have seen haven't even managed to elicit a chuckle out of me. I don't understand why it's so universally praised. Same goes for Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Totally seconding this. Seen a couple of episodes of both and didn't care for either. Since Seinfeld is much better known and regarded in the US than it is here, I've always had a sneaking suspicion that maybe it's some kind of cultural barrier... but then it's not like I haven't known people who are huge Curb fans (and even Seinfeld fans, but they tend to be Curb fans who discovered Seinfeld through Curb than grew up watching Seinfeld).

It's extremely smug, and it has a litany of problems, but damn if I don't love it anyway. It actually reminds me a lot of Star Trek; smug, pretentious, and melodramatic, but with great characters, some great stories, some really thought-provoking episodes, and a genuine warmth to it.
That's a pretty solid defence. I remember Wil Wheaton of all people comparing Gene Roddenberry and Aaron Sorkin in one of his TNG reviews, in their mixture of earnest liberal politics that could get more than a little didactic.

For some reason, I've never seen The Sopranos. I should probably pick up the DVDs from the library, since they're out of my price range to buy at the moment.

The Sopranos was the first full length HBO series I watched. It kind of spurred me to watch a dozen more (and now I keep up with a fair few HBO dramas as part of my TV diet - Game of Thrones, Boardwalk Empire, Treme...). But even ignoring all that it was just a fantastic TV show in its own right and honestly there wasn't a season of the Sopranos I didn't enjoy the hell out of. I'd say checking out the first season or just the Pilot episode is a good sense of testing the waters to see if you'd enjoy it as the Sopranos is one of those shows that was great from the get-go.

If you like Walton Goggins there's a lot to like in The Shield. I mean, he's a scuzzy slimeball but what a scuzzy slimeball!
Sounds good to me. I know him basically entirely from Justified, but he's one of the best things about what is a very, very good show.
 
^^ Justified, that's another one I have to catch up with! I actually have the first couple seasons bought at a sale price I couldn't resist. Might have to dig those out soon...
 
So very much. This is what I get for rewatching Trek too much.

I have never seen a single episode of Sex in the City. Or West Wing.

Tried to watch The Wire and couldn't finish the second episode.
 
So much food for thought here. Now got Firefly ready to watch. After that will definitely be Twin Peaks. Quite looking forward to it now :) Thanks for the all the heads-up :techman:
 
Was that intentional? :)
I may not watch Seinfeld, do I do know some of the lines. ;)

Anyway sounds like it's just not your type of humor if you don't like Curb at all either.
What perplexes me about Seinfeld is that many of the writers of my favourite comedy shows single out Seinfeld as a major influence. Graham Linehan even admits to having stolen a few Seinfeld jokes over the years and using them in Father Ted and The IT Crowd, and I find those shows to be very funny. It puzzles me how the source of so much humour for me over the years is a show that I don't find humorous.
 
I'm not really regretting having missed certain popular shows.

A few years back i'v watched a ton of shows.. so many i needed at least 2-3 hours a day to keep up with them but as shows ended or became bad i stopped watching most of them.

Often enough i just don't get the mass appeal.. case in point 24. I did a marathon watch of season 1 back in the day after it came out on DVD and apart from some scenes was totally hooked. Then came season 2 with more of the same and by middle season 3 i stopped.. the same applies to Lost.

These days when i try a new show they have exactly the pilot episode to keep my interest or make me curious to see more.. i've become very strict in that regard and if the writers/producers are unable to hook me with their pilot chances are very slim i'll give them another shot. A recent example would be Suburgatory.. supposed to be a funny show about Suburbia but i have not even chuckled once in the pilot so off to the grave with the show.

I'm pretty sure i'd enjoy some older shows.. West Wing (i love Sorkin shows.. his current project The Newsroom is ten times awesome.. go check it out) or Supernatural (friends have been bugging me for years to watch it) are amongst them but i simply don't have the time or the interest anymore to spend 100+ hours to catch up on shows.

I'm comfortable with the current shows i watch and when they end i hope some shows pick my interest well enough to keep around. So far the pickings are slim i'm afraid.
 
Laser, you're ahead of me.

I appreciate the thought, hon ;) , but you may want to rethink that. Not only have I missed most popular shows, but films as well. For example, I've never seen Titanic, Avatar, or any of the Nolanverse Batman films. Nor do I ever want to. :p

On the other hand, my favorite shows are ones that nobody here has even heard of. :brickwall:

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The Wire (one day, I'll catch up on this)
Breaking Bad
Downton Abbey (I really want to watch this)
Mad Men (watched only a few; didn't grab me. May have to try again later)
 
Just got to end of West Wing s2 and must admit that season finale was a real wtf moment.
I mean: ghosts/hallucinations? flashbacks to Barlett's adolescence? wtf? Yeah, I know there were flashbacks previously but seemed reasonable rather than gratuitous. It was a fairly 'realistic' drama with sharp humour until this point. Jeez, hope it gets back on track. Reminds me of nuBSG when Roslin was suddenly 'cured'.
 
Downton Abbey (I really want to watch this)
Mad Men (watched only a few; didn't grab me. May have to try again later)
I recently bought Dowton Abbey and looking forward to watch it. Couldn't stand Mad Men. :borg:

I missed many landmark shows, because I sporadicallly watch TV.

I still have to watch:
-B5 (tried it, but didn't quite enjoy it)
-Farscape
-Firefly
-Several of the Stargate series.
 
On the other hand, my favorite shows are ones that nobody here has even heard of. :brickwall: Such as:

Hey that looks funny, how come I've never heard of it?

Oh, it's Canadian. Nevermind...

The Wire (one day, I'll catch up on this)
Breaking Bad
Downton Abbey (I really want to watch this)
Mad Men (watched only a few; didn't grab me. May have to try again later)
I just finished the third season of Downton Abbey. It's not bad, but it really is a Masterpiece Theatre soap opera and not something I'd compare that favourably to the other three shows mentioned there (which are all very good).
 
Just got to end of West Wing s2 and must admit that season finale was a real wtf moment.
I mean: ghosts/hallucinations? flashbacks to Barlett's adolescence? wtf? Yeah, I know there were flashbacks previously but seemed reasonable rather than gratuitous. It was a fairly 'realistic' drama with sharp humour until this point. Jeez, hope it gets back on track. Reminds me of nuBSG when Roslin was suddenly 'cured'.
That's an unusual reaction. Two Cathedrals is widely regarded as TWW's best episode, and one of the best episodes of television ever made. I admit that I was iffy about it while watching it for the first time because I was expecting a major political episode and not an introspective character-piece, but it all came together in the final act and now there is not a moment in that episode I don't love.

It's the story of a man with a giant ego that's going through a major personal crisis and thinks that God himself is punishing him. It takes on a little bit of a supernatural twist at the end with the storm, the "ghost", and the re-baptism, but that suits it because the story itself is larger than life. It's Shakespearean.
 
:) I can see what they were doing, and I don't think it was badly written, acted or directed. Pretty damned good, in fact. It was just... a bit out of leftfield; the season had built up a good head of steam and I guess I was looking forward to a darker, grittier finale. This made me fear they might do down the Roslin-visions route - but hopefully it's a one off? And Downton? Yeah, posh soap I just enjoy as a bit tongue-in-cheek :)
 
On the other hand, my favorite shows are ones that nobody here has even heard of. :brickwall: Such as:

Hey that looks funny, how come I've never heard of it?

Oh, it's Canadian. Nevermind...

See what I mean? :(

To be fair, nobody here should even be expected to know what Corner Gas is. No network (that I'm aware of) even shows it anymore. WGN used to, but they stopped pretty quick. I can't even remember where I found out about it.

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